India-China: Dangerous Hysteria
By B. Raman
A dangerous
hysteria has taken hold of India-China
relations since the anti-Beijing uprising in
Lhasa in March last year. This hysteria is
not due to any actions or rhetoric by the
two Governments, which have been conducting
themselves in a balanced and restrained
manner. They have been trying to preserve
and expand the gains in bilateral relations
since the famous visit of Rajiv Gandhi to
China in 1988. They have been sincerely
trying to adhere to the bilateral agreement
on maintaining peace and tranquility till a
final solution is reached to the border
dispute between the two countries. This
hysteria has been the creation of some
sections of the non-governmental strategic
communities in the two countries.
2. There are
issues on which the two Governments have
reasons to be concerned and unhappy with
each other. India has reasons to be
concerned over past Chinese contacts with
the Naga and Mizo insurgents in the
North-East and with their present contacts,
as suspected, with the United Liberation
Front of Assam (ULFA). Similarly, China has
reasons to be concerned over the activities
of the set-up of His Holiness the Dalai Lama
and the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) from
the Indian territory and over the
reported presence in the Indian territory of
the National Endowment for Democracy (NED)
of the US which they blame for part of their
troubles in Xinjiang and Tibet. The two
Governments have refrained from publicly
articulating these concerns and have taken
care to see that these concerns do not come
in the way of the further development of the
bilateral relations.
3. Even in
respect of the bilateral dispute over the
border, one has to take note of the fact
that there has been no attempt by either
Government to change the status quo by
setting up an illegal territorial presence
in any sector of the border. In respect of
the Ladakh sector, India feels that the
status quo favours the Chinese because of
the Chinese occupation of large parts of our
territory in this sector after the People's
Republic of China came into existence in
1949. The Chinese have consolidated the
status quo, which favours them, by
constructing roads, setting up border posts
and creating border habitations in areas
which used to be unpopulated. India, while
not accepting the status quo de jure, has
not tried to disturb it de facto.
4. In the Eastern
sector (Arunachal Pradesh), the status quo,
which we inherited from the British, favours
us. The Chinese disturbed it briefly during
the Sino-Indian war of 1962 by occupying
large parts of it by taking advantage of our
weak military and administrative presence in
that area, but they unilaterally restored
the status quo by withdrawing from the area
occupied by them. If they had not withdrawn
unilaterally, our Army was not in a position
to eject them and we would have been
confronted in the Eastern sector with a
situation similar to the one in the Western
sector---that is, with a new post-1949
status quo set up by the Chinese which we
are not in a position to change. The Chinese
have been trying to change the status quo in
the Eastern sector in their favour not
through military means, but by claiming a
large part of this territory and insisting
on our conceding their demand over some (Tawang)
if not all of this territory as part of a
border settlement.
5.
Unfortunately, we find ourselves in an
unequal position with the Chinese. This is
because while the Chinese have consolidated
the status quo in the Western sector and
made sure that India will not be able to
change it militarily, we have similarly not
consolidated the status quo in the Eastern
sector and made sure that the Chinese will
not be able to change this militarily. Our
long-neglect of the North-East and our
failure to consolidate the status quo in
Arunachal Pradesh have placed China in a
strategically advantageous position in the
Eastern sector. Only in the last two or
three years have we realised the importance
of consolidating the status quo in the
Eastern sector by strengthening our military
and administrative presence in the area
through the construction of roads and
inducting fresh military units to protect
this area from any adventurist Chinese
action.
6. While the
Chinese have not sought to change the status
quo in the Arunachal Pradesh sector
militarily, they have created for themselves
a capability for doing so eventually if the
border talks fail. They have done this by
developing road and rail communications in
Tibet and by strengthening military
deployments in Tibet. We have only recently
realised the importance of giving ourselves
a capability in the Arunachal Pradesh sector
to thwart any Chinese attempt to change the
status quo militarily if the bilateral
border talks fail to break the deadlock.
7. The Chinese
long-term strategy with regard to India has
many facets. The trans-border developments
are only one---but the most important---
component of their strategy. There are other
components---namely, strengthening their
relationship with Pakistan in order to
confront India with the danger of a
two-front war should it try to change
militarily the status quo either in respect
of China or in respect of Pakistan with
regard to Jammu & Kashmir; giving Pakistan a
nuclear and missile capability for
threatening India; weakening the Indian
influence in the rest of South Asia and
strengthening their presence and influence
in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal;
creating a presence for their Navy in the
Indian Ocean region and opposing India's
attempts to emerge as an Asian power on par
with China.
8. Till recently,
we had no well thought-out long-term
strategy with regard to China----neither in
the border region, nor in South Asia nor in
the Indian Ocean region. Only recently the
initial rudiments of such a strategy have
been appearing. Our attempts to strengthen
our strategic relationship with the US and
Japan is one such building-block of this
comprehensive strategy. Our proactive Indian
Ocean policy is another building block. But
we find ourselves handicapped in further
developing such a comprehensive strategy
because we have let our influence be
weakened in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal.
9. The
post-March 2008 hysteria in the bilateral
relations has not been the creation of the
two Governments. It has been the outcome of
a new activism with regard to each other in
the non-governmental strategic communities
of the two countries. Sections of the Indian
strategic community saw in the Lhasa
uprising an opportunity to change the
status quo in Tibet by playing the Tibet
card against China through helping the
Tibetans in securing their legitimate rights
from the Han Chinese. By changing the status
quo in Tibet----not militarily which is out
of question, but politically by backing the
Tibetan people's efforts to change the
status quo themselves--- India might be able
to change the status quo in the Western
sector and preserve the status quo in the
Eastern sector. So these analysts believed
and started advocating vigorously a policy
of playing the Tibet card against China.
10. The activism
in the Chinese non-governmental strategic
community is partly the result of what they
see as the Indian activism on Tibet and
partly the result of the Indian activism in
Arunachal Pradesh for consolidating the
status quo. They want their Government to be
more assertive in playing the Arunachal
Pradesh card and to take advantage of the
difficulties faced by India in the
North-East to counter any attempt by India
to play the Tibet card. This hysteria has
resulted in a campaign of mutual
demonisation and mutual sabre-rattling. This
sabre-rattling is only at the
non-Governmental level. The two Governments
have maintained a distance from this
hysteria without trying to discourage it.
11. The danger of
such hysteria is that it could acquire an
uncontrollable momentum and take the two
countries towards a precipice from where
they may not be able to withdraw. Any
confrontation as a result of this hysteria
would damage the interests of both the
countries. This hysteria has to be defused
in time by the top leaderships of the two
countries interacting with each other more
frequently and more directly than now and
taking initiatives to remove wrong
perceptions about each other. It is unwise
for Indian analysts to talk of the Tibetan
card. The international community has
recognised Tibet as a part of China. While
it will be sympathetic to any Tibetan
attempts to free themselves of Chinese
control, it will not support any Indian
initiative or move in this regard. By
frequently talking of the Tibetan card, we
will only be adding to the suspicions and
concerns in the Chinese mind.
12. It is equally
unwise for Chinese analysts to talk of the
Arunachal Pradesh (southern Tibet as they
call it) or the North-East card. The
international community looks upon these
areas as a part of India and will not
support any Chinese move to change the
status quo. Much of this hysteria will die
down automatically if the two countries
reach a border settlement. The only border
settlement, which will be equally
advantageous, is for India to accord de jure
recognition to the status quo in the Western
sector in return for China recognising the
status quo in the Eastern sector. The
present difficulties in the Eastern sector
are apparently due to the fact that China
wants a face-saving formula by India handing
over at least Tawang to it. India cannot do
this because Tawang is a populated area. Its
inhabitants are Indian citizens. No India
political leader will be able to sell to the
people and the parliament any concession,
which would involve any population transfer.
13. So, what are
the options? Either go on holding one
meeting after another without any forward
movement or think of some idea which could
break the present deadlock. One idea could
be to explore the possibility of a 'status
quo plus' solution under which China will
recognise the status quo in Arunachal
Pradesh in return for India accommodating
some of the Chinese interests in Tawang.
14. Once the
border dispute is solved to our mutual
satisfaction, the danger of a military
confrontation between the two countries
across the Himalayas will lessen
considerably. But the competition between
the two countries for influence in the
region and outside will remain in the near
and medium-term future, but this competition
need not lead to a military confrontation.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also
associated with the Chennai Centre For China
Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com)